What business are you in? Overcoming Identity – Apple & Hewlett Packard (HP)

"What business are you in?" is one of the most common business questions asked.  People usually want a simple answer, like "I make widgets" or "I provide widget services."  A simple answer allows people to easily cubbyhole the business, and remember what it does.  And many think it provides for a well run business – through a simple focus – sort of like the Kentucky Fried Chicken ad "We only do chicken, and we do chicken right."  Because the business's Identity is easy to understand employees can focus on Defending that Identity.

But in reality when your Identity is tightly tied to a product or service bad things happen when demand for that item wanes — or demand turns flat while supply is ample (or possibly growing).  Competitors start trading punishing blows back and forth, and profits wane as competition intensifies.  Business leaders start acting like gladiators trapped in a coliseum pit, undertaking ever more dangerous actions to survive amidst punishing competitiveness.  Many don't survive.  As results are increasingly threatened, the business's Identity is under attack, and the tendency to Defend that Identity is extremely strong.  Such defense usually grows, even as results continue deteriorating.

There is an alternative.  Instead of trying to always be what you always were, you can do something different.  Think about Hewlett Packard.  HP started as an instrumentation company, making electronic tools, such as oscilliscopes, for engineers.  But as the market shifted, HP's leaders have moved the company into new business – allowing the company to keep growing

HP profit-2005-2010
Source:  Business Insider

By entering new businesses, some organically and some via acquisition, HP has been able to continue growing sales and profits.  By letting each of these businesses do whatever they need to do to succeed, by giving them permission to do what the market demands and providing these new businesses with resources, HP has been able to compete in old businesses, while developing new businesses toward which the Success Formula can migrate.  Thus, HP has become a company with a less simple Identity – but it also has been able to continue years of profitable growth.

Too often, opening these White Space projects for growth causes the traditional business to feel threatened.  Those in the old Success Formula will often say that the company is "abandoning its past" and "walking away from a very profitable business."  Like the old story of Homer, this is a "siren's song" – very dangerously pulling you toward the rocks which can sink your ship – because each month profitabiilty is becoming more and more threatened.  While it might have been a profitable business in the past, as growth slows profitability is less and less likely in the future.  As sales growth slows it is important the business do its best to develop a new Success Formula so it can maintain growth.

"Has Apple Forgotten the Mac?" is a recent PCWorld article.  The authors point out that as Apple's revenues have transitioned toward new businesses, such as music and now mobile computing/telephony, the Mac business receives less attention and resources.  Those who support the Mac business question if Apple should spend more resources on what has recently returned to profitability.

This is the kind of internal threat that can be very risky.  While the Mac is a great product, with a loyal following, and regained profitability – we can see that in the future there will be less and less need for such desktop and laptop products.  Apple is migrating toward the new mobile future – and as a result it must reduce the resources on the Mac business.  Each year, more resource needs to be allocated toward the new, faster growing businesses, and less invested in the slower growing traditional computing products.

Apple's Identity was once all Mac.  And that nearly bankrupted the company – as it almost ran out of cash back at the century's turn.  Only by overcoming its Identity as a single product company, and rapidly moving into White Space with new products in new markets, was Apple able to regain its profitable growth path. 

HP and Apple both show us that an Identity, created early in the lifecycle, is very powerful.  But inevitably markets shift, and the results possible from a simple, easy to understand identity will decline.  Only by overcoming that original Identity via entering new markets – and using White Space to evolve the Success Formula, can a business hope to have long-term revenue and profit growth.

Be Wary of Quick Fixes – HP, Dell, EDS and Perot Systems

Last week was big news for technology.  Hewlett Packard announced it was killing the EDS brand name, pushing to make HP more of an integrated solutions company (like IBM).  And Dell bought Perot Systems to launch itsfirst push into services.  According to Washington Technology "HP, Dell Know They Have to Change or Die."  The article talks about the dramatically shifting marketplace (love that language!), and how these two hardware oriented companies are trying to avoid the Sun Microsystems finality by getting into services.  The author says the companies must "adapt or die," and "there's no sitting still."  He goes on to say "it may take years," but he thinks they will transition and eventually be successful.  His success forecast hinges on his belief that they must change to survive – and that will be sufficient motivation.

I love the awareness of shifting markets, and the recognition that shifts are demanding changes in these former leaders.  But I don't agree with the conclusion that future success is highly likely.  Because even with big acquisitions and name changes – HP and Dell haven't laid the groundwork to change.  They have taken some rifle shots, but they haven't followed The Phoenix Principle and that means the odds are less than 10% they will successfully transition.

Lots of companies have tried to transition via acquisition.  Heck, GM once bought EDS (and Hughes Electronics) – and look what it did for them.  Just because a company buys something doesn't mean they'll change.  McDonald's bought Chipotle, and then sold it despite double digit growth to fund acquisition of additional McDonald's.  Just because a company needs to change its Success Formula to succeed – or even survive – is a long way from proving they will do it.

Neither HP or Dell show they are building a company for the future.  Unfortunately, they look to be chasing a model built by IBM in the 1990s.  Taking action in 2009 to recreate "best practices" of 15 – 20 years ago is far from creating a company positioned for success.  There is no discussion of future scenario planning from either company – about technology use or changing business practices.  No description of their scenarios for 2015 and 2020 – scenarios that would demonstrate very high growth and payoff from their action.  To the contrary, all the discussion seems to be defensive.  They are getting into services – finally – because they realize their growth has slowed and profits are declining.  It's not really about the future, it's action taken by studying the rear view mirror.

Additionally, there is no discussion of any Disruptions at either company.  To change organizations must attack old Lock-ins.  Embedded processes – from hiring and reviews to product development and resource allocation – all exist to Defend & Extend past behavior.  If these aren't attacked head-on then organizations quickly conform any potential change into something like the past.  In the case of these companies, lacking a clear view of what future markets should look like, they have opted to forgo Disruptions.   Mr. Gerstner attacked the sacred cows around IBM viciously in his effort to transition the company into more services.  But the CEOs at HP and Dell are far less courageous.

And there's no White Space here for developing a new Success Formula aligned with market needs as they are emerging.  Instead of creating an environment in which new leaders can compete in new ways, these businesses are being instructed on how to behave – according to some plan designed by someone who clearly thinks they are smarter than the marketplace.  Without White Space, "the plan" is going to struggle to meet with markets that will continue to shift every bit as fast the next 2 years as they did the last year.

I have very limited expectations that these actions will increase the performance of either company.  I predict organic growth will slow, as "integration" issues mount and "synergy" activities take more time than growth initiatives.  They will not see a big improvement in profits, because competition is extremely severe and there is no sign these companies are introducing any kind of innovation that will leapfrog existing competitors – remember, mere size is not enough to succeed in today's marketplace.  They will largely be somewhat bigger, but no more successful.

It's easy to get excited when a company makes an acquisition off the beaten path.  But you must look closely at their actions and plans before setting expectations.  These companies could make big changes.  But that would require a lot more scenario planning, a lot more focus on emerging competitors (not the existing, well known behemoths), much more Disruption to knock back the Lock-in and White Space for building a new Success Formula.  Without those actions this is going to be another acquisition followed by missed expectations, cost cutting and discussions about size that cover up declining organic growth.